Coconut Alcohol ●
TL;DR. This ingredient primarily acts as a fatty alcohol thickener, emulsion stabilizer, and texture builder in creams, lotions, conditioners, and cleansing products. It can also add slip, opacity, and mild foam support.
What does Coconut Alcohol do in a cosmetic formula?
This ingredient primarily acts as a fatty alcohol thickener, emulsion stabilizer, and texture builder in creams, lotions, conditioners, and cleansing products. It can also add slip, opacity, and mild foam support.
Is Coconut Alcohol clean?
This material is generally well accepted in clean-beauty frameworks because it is typically well tolerated and not a common sensitizer. It is a fatty alcohol, so it behaves differently from short-chain drying alcohols used as fast-evaporating solvents.
Is Coconut Alcohol sustainable?
This ingredient is usually plant-derived from it oil and is expected to be readily biodegradable. The main sustainability questions are agricultural sourcing, traceability, and labor practices in the it supply chain rather than environmental persistence.
Is Coconut Alcohol COSMOS-approved?
It is permitted under COSMOS-natural and COSMOS-organic formulas when made from approved vegetable feedstocks using compliant processing. It fits Green Chemistry reasonably well because it comes from renewable lipids, has low persistence, and can be made through established fatty-acid hydrogenation routes.
How does Coconut Alcohol work chemically?
This material is a mixture of long-chain saturated fatty alcohols with waxy, nonionic behavior, which helps build lamellar structure and viscosity in emulsions. Typical use is often around 0.5% to 5% for texture and stabilization, and it is broadly pH-stable because it has no readily ionizable functional group.
Last updated 2026-05-13